
By Shayla Srabian
Staff Writer
The
CSU Fresno Armenian Studies Program Spring Lecture Series featured Nancy
Kricorian, author of Zabelle on March 2, 1999 at St. Paul Armenian Church,
in Fresno. The talk was co-sponsored by the Church.
Dr. Dickran Kouymjian, Director of the Armenian Studies Program, introduced
Nancy Kricorian giving a brief biography of her accomplishments.
She is a graduate of Dartmouth University with a degree (magna cum laude)
in Comparative Literature. She then went on to Columbia University
and earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in the writing program. She has
taught at Columbia and a number of prestigious East Coast universities.
Nancy Kricorian was raised in Watertown, Massachusettes and is now
living in New York City with her husband John Schamus and their two daughters.
Nancy Kricorian is a poet as well as an author. She began her writing career
by publishing poetry in such journals as Ararat. She is the recipient of
a number of literary prizes, most recently the prestigious Columbia University
Advisory Board Award.
Dr. Kouymjian stated, "It's always a treat to have a poet speak,
because poets spend their time and lives reflecting on our situations.
It's usually through the words of a poet that we find out where we have
been and where we are going. It is through the poet that we understand
a little bit better what life ought to mean to us... In her own words Nancy
turned to the longer form of fiction to express things that sometimes are
hard to compress into poetry. She chose for her first novel, a story about
a very strong woman-a woman named Zabelle."
Kricorian's inspiration for the novel was to simply write to attract a
broader audience. Missing her grandmother after her death she felt
compelled to write down the many memories she had of her. The two
books that inspired her to write this novel are Sula by Toni Morrison,
and My Name is Aram by William Saroyan.
Zabelle is the fictional story of a woman who survived the Armenian Genocide
of 1915. She comes to America in an arranged marriage to an Armenian
grocer named Toros. The novel is based on a combination of research
and elements from the author's own life and memories. Dr. Kouymjian
described her writing as having an "elegance of language."
She began the evening by reading two excerpts from the book. She
read from the first chapter which described her grandmother's experiences
during the Armenian Genocide.
The second excerpt dealt with Zabelle's son Moses who faced the dilemma
of a second-generation Armenian growing up in America. The often
humorous anecdotes provoked laughter from the audience.
Kricorian closed the evening by reading "The Angel," a poem she wrote
after her grandmother passed away. It spoke about what her grandmother's
heaven is like. For example, Jesus would stop by for a cup of Armenian
coffee and chat with her grandmother. The poem was very touching
as well as familiar to those who are Armenian.
Fresno State students Heidi Dunbar, Andrea Antranikian and Tim Kuckenbaker
agreed "her writing is interesting as well as informative."
In closing, Nancy Kricorian displayed her energy and enthusiasm which were
expressed through her writing. She identified with the Armenian youth of
today. Those of us who have been close with our grandmothers have
a deep understanding of the novel.